The Correct Order of Selections for a Kitchen Renovation

The Correct Order of Selections for a Kitchen Renovation

How to Avoid Costly Mistakes When Planning Your Kitchen Renovation

Kitchen renovations don’t usually go wrong because of bad taste. They go wrong because decisions are made out of order.

One of the most expensive mistakes happens early: cabinetry is designed and ordered before appliances are selected, often based on “standard” sizes.

A client came to me after doing exactly that. On paper, everything looked fine. Once we reviewed the kitchen renovation more closely, it wasn’t. Appliance clearances didn’t work, venting had to change, and cabinet modifications were required. By then, the cabinets were already in production.

It wasn’t a disaster, but it was expensive. Thousands of dollars were spent correcting decisions that weren’t wrong; they were simply made too early.

Big-box cabinet planning relies on averages. Real kitchens don’t. When you factor in specific appliance brands, ventilation requirements, and required clearances, kitchen renovation sequencing becomes just as important as the selections themselves.

A beautiful kitchen isn’t created by picking finishes first. It’s created by making the right decisions at the right time.

A marble cutting board with sliced figs and a knife sits on a white kitchen countertop near a window, adding elegance to the kitchen. A knife block and spice containers are arranged in the background.

The Construction-Accurate Order of Selections

This is the order we follow during a kitchen renovation to protect both the design and the budget.

1. Scope, Budget, and Priorities

Define how the kitchen needs to function, lifestyle requirements, non-negotiables, and budget guardrails that prevent rework later.

2. Appliance Planning (Non-Negotiable)

Appliance selection drives cabinet dimensions, ventilation, and electrical and gas locations. Appliances must be selected before cabinetry is finalized.

3. Preliminary Lighting Plan (Rough-In Phase)

Confirm recessed lighting placement, pendant and sconce locations, hood lighting requirements, under-cabinet lighting routing and drivers, and switch locations.

This phase focuses on placement and wiring paths—not decorative fixtures.

4. Cabinetry Layout and Design

Finalize cabinetry once appliances and lighting placement are confirmed. This ensures proper clearances, lighting alignment over work zones, and integrated under-cabinet lighting.

5. Plumbing Fixtures and Sink Selection

Confirm sink size, faucet drilling, and pot-filler rough-ins once cabinet layouts are locked.

6. Countertop Direction

Select the countertop material and edge profiles while establishing the overall backsplash strategy.

7. Backsplash Direction

Determine tile versus slab, full-height versus upper-cabinet termination, and coordinate with under-cabinet lighting.

8. Final Decorative Lighting Selection

Choose pendants, sconces, and statement fixtures once ceiling heights and cabinet proportions are finalized.

9. Cabinet Hardware

Finalize hardware size, finish, and placement.

10. Paint and Finish Confirmation

Confirm cabinet color, adjacent room transitions, and ceiling finishes that affect how lighting reads throughout the space.

11. Slab Selection and Template

View and approve slabs, finalize seams, and template after cabinets are installed.

12. Final Styling and Accessories

Complete the kitchen with styling details that make the space feel finished, layered, and personal.

Modern kitchen with white cabinets, stainless steel stove and hood, black sink faucet, marble countertops, stylish tile backsplash, and a large pendant light hanging above the island.

The Takeaway

A successful kitchen renovation isn’t just about choosing beautiful materials. It’s about making decisions in the correct order so nothing has to be undone later.

When appliances are planned early, cabinetry can be designed with intention. When they aren’t, cabinetry often has to be corrected—quietly draining time, money, and momentum.

That’s the difference between choosing things you like and designing a kitchen that truly works.

This reflects the general order we follow for most kitchen renovations. Specific projects, site conditions, or construction methods may slightly alter the sequence.

A Quick Checklist to Save Before You Plan a Kitchen Renovation

If you’re in the planning phase right now, this list is worth saving.

  • Confirm how the kitchen needs to function and set budget guardrails
  • Select appliances before committing to cabinetry
  • Lock lighting placement and rough-ins before walls are closed
  • Finalize cabinetry after appliances and lighting placement are confirmed
  • Confirm sink size, plumbing fixtures, and rough-ins
  • Decide on countertop material and overall backsplash direction
  • Select decorative lighting only after the ceiling and cabinet heights are known
  • Finalize hardware, paint, and finishes
  • Select slabs and a template after the cabinets are installed

This checklist alone prevents the most common kitchen renovation mistakes I see.

Modern white kitchen with brass hardware, a black and gold pendant light, a farmhouse sink, and a window with a beige Roman shade create a timeless kitchen ambiance.

If You’re Being Asked to Decide These Things Too Early, Pause

  • Cabinets before appliances
  • Pendants before ceiling heights are confirmed
  • Tile before lighting placement is planned
  • Slabs before cabinets are installed

That’s your signal to slow down—and ask better questions.

Inquire with us to ensure your kitchen renovation decisions are made in the right order, with clarity and confidence.

A woman in a magenta blazer and white pants stands in a white room holding a vase with flowers. Shelves with decorative items are behind her.

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